Stove volume/weight importance?

Callionet

FNG
Joined
Dec 1, 2024
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2
Hello, I am looking for a ultralight Titanium wood stove for one person.

How important is the firebox volume comparing to how air tight, efficient a stove is for burn time?

The Seek Outside SXL is the most dead simple stove design-wise but is also only 30% the weight of most other stove with the same volume. Is bigger volume > more wood > longer burn time usually most of the factor?
 

Brad@Argali

WKR
Rokslide Sponsor
Joined
Oct 12, 2016
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457
Location
Idaho
Hello, I am looking for a ultralight Titanium wood stove for one person.

How important is the firebox volume comparing to how air tight, efficient a stove is for burn time?

The Seek Outside SXL is the most dead simple stove design-wise but is also only 30% the weight of most other stove with the same volume. Is bigger volume > more wood > longer burn time usually most of the factor?
Volume is incredibly important for burn time and just constantly not having to stuff a stove full of wood all of the time. There is a happy medium between volume and weight depending on how big of a space you need to heat up. I'd also pay attention to stove body length so you don't have to stuff with short sticks. Our rule of thumb with our titanium stoves is you need to be able to get larger diameter rounds in for decent burn times.

I wouldn't worry about a stove being air tight though. It should be pretty air tight, but not like fort knox. As soon as the fire gets going, assuming it has good air intake and outage, the draft will pull the smoke put the chimney really well.
 
OP
C

Callionet

FNG
Joined
Dec 1, 2024
Messages
2
Volume is incredibly important for burn time and just constantly not having to stuff a stove full of wood all of the time. There is a happy medium between volume and weight depending on how big of a space you need to heat up. I'd also pay attention to stove body length so you don't have to stuff with short sticks. Our rule of thumb with our titanium stoves is you need to be able to get larger diameter rounds in for decent burn times.

I wouldn't worry about a stove being air tight though. It should be pretty air tight, but not like fort knox. As soon as the fire gets going, assuming it has good air intake and outage, the draft will pull the smoke put the chimney really well.
Thank you for your answer. Glad to know that the stove does not have to be extremely air-tight.

What would be your recommendation for stove length and volume for a 2-person shelter?
Is pipe diameter important for smoldering the fire or you can adjust the damper for the same amount of airflow?
 

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